LLC vs S-Corp Tax Savings Calculator | Copilotly
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LLC vs S-Corp Savings Calculator

Enter your projected profit and a reasonable salary. See exact self-employment tax savings from an S-Corp election.

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This calculator answers a question every freelancer and consultant eventually faces: is it worth electing S-Corporation status for my LLC? The answer depends on your profit, what counts as a reasonable salary for your role, and whether the savings clear the $1,000-$2,000/year of payroll and accounting overhead an S-Corp adds. Slide your numbers above to see the verdict.
01

What actually changes when you elect S-Corp status

By default, a single-member LLC is taxed as a disregarded entity - meaning your business profit hits your personal return as self-employment income. All of it gets hit with the 15.3% self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security up to $168,600 in 2024, plus 2.9% Medicare with no cap).

When you file IRS Form 2553 to elect S-Corp taxation, the IRS treats you as an employee of your own business. You split your profit into two buckets:

  • Reasonable salary - paid via real payroll. This portion gets hit with payroll tax (same 15.3%, just split between you-as-employer and you-as-employee).
  • Distributions - the rest of the profit. These skip payroll tax entirely. You still pay income tax on them, just not self-employment tax.

That distribution portion dodging payroll tax is the savings. The bigger the gap between your total profit and your reasonable salary, the bigger the win.

02

The "reasonable salary" trap

The IRS is well aware that S-Corp owners are incentivized to pay themselves $1 and call the rest distributions. So the rule is: your salary must be reasonable for your role, industry, location, and the size of the business. Set it too low and you risk an audit, back-payroll-tax assessment, penalties, and interest.

There is no single formula the IRS publishes, but practitioners typically use one of these heuristics:

  • 40-60% rule: Pay yourself 40-60% of profit as salary. This calculator highlights this range automatically.
  • Comparable wage: What would a comparable role pay on the open market (Glassdoor, BLS data)?
  • Replacement cost: What would it cost to hire someone to do your role?

For specific guidance on your situation, our Business Formation Copilot walks through the analysis with industry benchmarks.

03

The overhead that often kills the math

S-Corp status comes with costs that a plain LLC does not have:

  • Payroll service ($40-80/month, or $500-1,000/year): Gusto, ADP, or similar to run real payroll, file 941s, issue W-2s.
  • S-Corp tax return (Form 1120-S): $400-1,500 from a CPA versus a free Schedule C on your 1040.
  • Quarterly payroll filings (federal + state)
  • Unemployment insurance in most states
  • Workers comp in some states

This calculator bakes in a conservative $1,200/year overhead estimate. If your savings before overhead are under $1,500, the election is rarely worth the operational complexity.

04

A simple rule of thumb

For most consultants and freelancers:

  • Under $50k profit: Stay as plain LLC. The overhead eats any savings.
  • $50k-$80k profit: Marginal. Run the numbers carefully.
  • $80k-$150k profit: S-Corp usually wins by $3k-$8k/year.
  • $150k-$200k profit: Clear win - typically $7k-$12k/year in savings.
  • Over $200k profit: Big win, but the marginal benefit per extra dollar of profit drops once your salary exceeds the SS cap ($168,600 in 2024).

Use the calculator to pressure-test these brackets with your actual numbers.

05

When an S-Corp election is the wrong move

Stay as a plain LLC if:

  • Your profit is under $50k and unlikely to grow soon
  • You plan to reinvest most profit back into the business
  • You want to contribute the maximum to a SEP-IRA (S-Corp limits SEP contributions more tightly)
  • You operate in a state with steep S-Corp filing fees or franchise tax (California, for example, has a $800 minimum)
  • You hate paperwork and have no interest in running payroll, even outsourced

Talk to a tax pro before filing Form 2553 - the election affects how you have to operate the business and is annoying to reverse.

✓When to use this
  • Freelance consultants deciding whether to elect S-Corp status
  • Solo agency owners hitting six figures of profit
  • eCommerce / SaaS founders planning their first big tax year
  • CPAs and accountants double-checking client recommendations
  • Anyone forming a new LLC and wondering which path to take
𝑓How the math works
Uses 2024 self-employment tax rates: 12.4% Social Security on wages up to $168,600, plus 2.9% Medicare with no cap. Plain LLC computation applies SE tax to full profit. S-Corp computation applies payroll tax to the salary portion only. We subtract a $1,200 annual overhead estimate for payroll and S-Corp tax filing to give you net savings. State-level franchise tax and additional Medicare on wages over $200k are not modeled.
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Frequently asked questions

What is an S-Corp election and how do I make it?
It is an IRS designation that changes how your LLC is taxed. You file Form 2553 within 75 days of formation or by March 15 to apply for the current year. Once elected, you must run real payroll and file Form 1120-S annually.
How much can I save with an S-Corp?
It depends on your profit and reasonable salary. Most consultants in the $100k-$200k profit range save $5,000-$10,000 per year after overhead. The calculator above gives a precise estimate for your numbers.
What is a "reasonable salary" for IRS purposes?
There is no fixed formula. The IRS looks at what someone in your role, industry, and market would earn. A common safe range is 40-60% of profit, but salary should also reflect comparable wage data for your specific role.
Can I reverse the S-Corp election if it does not work out?
Yes, but it is awkward. The IRS generally requires a 5-year wait after revoking before re-electing. Think hard before filing Form 2553.
Does the S-Corp election affect my state taxes?
Often yes. Some states (California, New Jersey) impose franchise tax or minimum tax on S-Corps. Some states do not recognize the federal election and tax the entity differently. Check your state.
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